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Word learning in bilingual children

Research output: ThesisDoctoral Thesis

Published

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Word learning in bilingual children. / Chan, Kin Chung Jacky.
Lancaster University, 2020. 288 p.

Research output: ThesisDoctoral Thesis

Harvard

APA

Chan, K. C. J. (2020). Word learning in bilingual children. [Doctoral Thesis, Lancaster University]. Lancaster University. https://doi.org/10.17635/lancaster/thesis/1052

Vancouver

Chan KCJ. Word learning in bilingual children. Lancaster University, 2020. 288 p. doi: 10.17635/lancaster/thesis/1052

Author

Chan, Kin Chung Jacky. / Word learning in bilingual children. Lancaster University, 2020. 288 p.

Bibtex

@phdthesis{f4042fb9b0cc44a393839aa6ae03b5a0,
title = "Word learning in bilingual children",
abstract = "In a 21st-century super-diverse world, young children are likely to speak different first languages which are not the majority language of society. For some children, preschool is one of the few environments where they experience this majority language. A pressing issue encountered by preschool teachers is how to communicate with these children and how to help these children acquire the majority language they need for a successful school entry. Building a repertoire of words in the majority language is one of the first steps. Strategies that monolingual children use to map words to their referents in the environment have been of interest for 60 years. However, less is known about the early development of word learning in bilingual children. This thesis, therefore, seeks to understand how monolingual and bilingual children utilise different strategies to learn words using experimental methods and look at how preschool teachers communicate with children in a preschool setting via naturalistic observation. The ultimate goal of this thesis is to identify and develop strategies that preschool teachers can use to foster children{\textquoteright}s development of the majority language.In two experimental studies, this thesis examined (1) how monolingual and bilingual preschoolers learn words from speakers of different languages through mutual exclusivity and the acceptance of lexical overlap, and (2) whether and how socio-pragmatic cues influence monolingual and bilingual language learners{\textquoteright} learning of one-to-one and two-to-one word-object mappings through cross-situational statistics. In two observational studies, this thesis looked into whether and how preschool teachers in a UK setting communicated differently with monolingual preschoolers and preschoolers learning English as an additional language (EAL). The thesis also set out to identify the linguistic features of preschool talk that could predict preschoolers{\textquoteright}, especially EAL children{\textquoteright}s, language development.The findings of the experimental studies show a complex interaction between the different word-learning strategies and prior language experience, and the results suggest that word-learning strategies available to monolingual and bilingual learners are the same but used differently. The findings of the observational studies show that preschool teacher talk to EAL children, in terms of lexical diversity and syntactic complexity, affects the children{\textquoteright}s development of English, suggesting that preschool teachers{\textquoteright} language use could scaffold and support EAL children{\textquoteright}s acquisition of English. The findings of this thesis suggest that matching language input to EAL children{\textquoteright}s English level and setting up learning situations that closely mimic those of bilingual word learning may be helpful strategies for preschool teachers to support EAL children{\textquoteright}s English development.",
keywords = "word learning, EAL, bilingualism, mutual exclusivity, lexical overlap, cross-situational statistical learning, naturalistic observation, language development, language input",
author = "Chan, {Kin Chung Jacky}",
year = "2020",
doi = "10.17635/lancaster/thesis/1052",
language = "English",
publisher = "Lancaster University",
school = "Lancaster University",

}

RIS

TY - BOOK

T1 - Word learning in bilingual children

AU - Chan, Kin Chung Jacky

PY - 2020

Y1 - 2020

N2 - In a 21st-century super-diverse world, young children are likely to speak different first languages which are not the majority language of society. For some children, preschool is one of the few environments where they experience this majority language. A pressing issue encountered by preschool teachers is how to communicate with these children and how to help these children acquire the majority language they need for a successful school entry. Building a repertoire of words in the majority language is one of the first steps. Strategies that monolingual children use to map words to their referents in the environment have been of interest for 60 years. However, less is known about the early development of word learning in bilingual children. This thesis, therefore, seeks to understand how monolingual and bilingual children utilise different strategies to learn words using experimental methods and look at how preschool teachers communicate with children in a preschool setting via naturalistic observation. The ultimate goal of this thesis is to identify and develop strategies that preschool teachers can use to foster children’s development of the majority language.In two experimental studies, this thesis examined (1) how monolingual and bilingual preschoolers learn words from speakers of different languages through mutual exclusivity and the acceptance of lexical overlap, and (2) whether and how socio-pragmatic cues influence monolingual and bilingual language learners’ learning of one-to-one and two-to-one word-object mappings through cross-situational statistics. In two observational studies, this thesis looked into whether and how preschool teachers in a UK setting communicated differently with monolingual preschoolers and preschoolers learning English as an additional language (EAL). The thesis also set out to identify the linguistic features of preschool talk that could predict preschoolers’, especially EAL children’s, language development.The findings of the experimental studies show a complex interaction between the different word-learning strategies and prior language experience, and the results suggest that word-learning strategies available to monolingual and bilingual learners are the same but used differently. The findings of the observational studies show that preschool teacher talk to EAL children, in terms of lexical diversity and syntactic complexity, affects the children’s development of English, suggesting that preschool teachers’ language use could scaffold and support EAL children’s acquisition of English. The findings of this thesis suggest that matching language input to EAL children’s English level and setting up learning situations that closely mimic those of bilingual word learning may be helpful strategies for preschool teachers to support EAL children’s English development.

AB - In a 21st-century super-diverse world, young children are likely to speak different first languages which are not the majority language of society. For some children, preschool is one of the few environments where they experience this majority language. A pressing issue encountered by preschool teachers is how to communicate with these children and how to help these children acquire the majority language they need for a successful school entry. Building a repertoire of words in the majority language is one of the first steps. Strategies that monolingual children use to map words to their referents in the environment have been of interest for 60 years. However, less is known about the early development of word learning in bilingual children. This thesis, therefore, seeks to understand how monolingual and bilingual children utilise different strategies to learn words using experimental methods and look at how preschool teachers communicate with children in a preschool setting via naturalistic observation. The ultimate goal of this thesis is to identify and develop strategies that preschool teachers can use to foster children’s development of the majority language.In two experimental studies, this thesis examined (1) how monolingual and bilingual preschoolers learn words from speakers of different languages through mutual exclusivity and the acceptance of lexical overlap, and (2) whether and how socio-pragmatic cues influence monolingual and bilingual language learners’ learning of one-to-one and two-to-one word-object mappings through cross-situational statistics. In two observational studies, this thesis looked into whether and how preschool teachers in a UK setting communicated differently with monolingual preschoolers and preschoolers learning English as an additional language (EAL). The thesis also set out to identify the linguistic features of preschool talk that could predict preschoolers’, especially EAL children’s, language development.The findings of the experimental studies show a complex interaction between the different word-learning strategies and prior language experience, and the results suggest that word-learning strategies available to monolingual and bilingual learners are the same but used differently. The findings of the observational studies show that preschool teacher talk to EAL children, in terms of lexical diversity and syntactic complexity, affects the children’s development of English, suggesting that preschool teachers’ language use could scaffold and support EAL children’s acquisition of English. The findings of this thesis suggest that matching language input to EAL children’s English level and setting up learning situations that closely mimic those of bilingual word learning may be helpful strategies for preschool teachers to support EAL children’s English development.

KW - word learning

KW - EAL

KW - bilingualism

KW - mutual exclusivity

KW - lexical overlap

KW - cross-situational statistical learning

KW - naturalistic observation

KW - language development

KW - language input

U2 - 10.17635/lancaster/thesis/1052

DO - 10.17635/lancaster/thesis/1052

M3 - Doctoral Thesis

PB - Lancaster University

ER -